difference - UW Tyee Club

THE
TYEE
DIFFERENCE
UNIVERSITY OF
WASHINGTON
Box 354070
Seattle WA 98195-4070
[email protected]
206.543.2234
uwtyeeclub.org
YOUR SUPPORT. THEIR FUTURE. OUR HUSKIES.
GAME CHANGERS 2016
Thank you to all the dedicated donors who committed $50,000 or more in 2016
to The Game Changer Campaign for Husky Athletics!
Maryanne & Monti Ackerman
Tom & Mary Herche
David & Carol Robinson
The Barnard Family
Craig & Ramona Higashi
Katie & Matthew Rossmeissl
John Baughn
Fred W. Hines Jr.
Randy & Karen Rushforth
Marjorie Beardsley
Greg & Joelle Hoff
Kerry Sawyer
Thomas Benton
Kevin & Krista Hughes
Paul & Susan Skoglund
Robert & Jeri Berg
Richard & Janet Hunter
Skip & Carrie Slavin
Ed & Pam Bridge
Nick & Michele Keller
Janet Straus & Kathleen Raney
Dwayne & Terese Clark
John Kincaid
E.C. Suhrbier Family
Jen & Bill Cohen
M. Thomas & Gwenann Kroon
Scott & Catherine Swanson
Connell Oil Incorporated
Christopher & Jonell Lee
Garth & Shelley Thomas
Douglas & Patricia Cook
Brian & Nancy Leitgeb
Robert & Debra Thompson
Ron & Wanda Crockett
Mark & Stacie Ludden
Bob & Kathy Trimble
Michael & Melanie Crowson
AJ Maestas & Lacey Bundy
Jim & Patty Voelker
Neal & Jan Dempsey III
Tim & Rachel Mitrovich
John & Diane Wallace
Craig & Marilee Eerkes
Neubauer Capital, LLC
Alex & Erika Washburn
Paul & Linda Ellingson
Bruce & Jeannie Nordstrom
Bob & Peggy Wilkerson
Lorne & Tyera Enquist
Blake & Molly Nordstrom
William & Allison Williams III
Kristie & Ben Forrest
Janice & Rodney Olson
Steven & Dixie Wilson
Rick Freedman
John & Ingrid Osterhaug
Anthony Zedick & Marcia Bloemendaal
Gary & Della Furukawa
Todd & Julie Patrick
Anonymous
Georgetown Brewing Company
Joseph & Erika Pendergast
Anne Gittinger
Douglas Pettis Jr.
Gary & Marcia Grimstad
William & Dorothy Philip
Wayne & Carol Gullstad
Dean & Gwenn Polik
Daniel & Pamela Hay
Nancy & Ben Remak
*Gifts as of December 31, 2016
WINTER 2017
WHAT A SEASON!
PAGES 3, 6 – 7
A LIFETIME OF MEMORIES,
A LEGACY OF GIVING
PAGES 8 – 9
YOUR GIFTS BUILD STUDENT
ATHLETES FOR LIFE
PAGES 10 – 11
WHAT A SEASON!
A SEASON TO REMEMBER —
ALL THANKS TO YOU
Some people say it all started with the Stanford game. The sellout crowd.
The blowout victory. Domination. Elation. Like nothing we’d seen at Husky
Stadium for years and years.
Others say it began the day Coach Chris Petersen brought his “built for life”
philosophy to Washington, focusing on developing young men of character
and grit into a powerhouse football team that laid their hearts on the line
for love of the game and
pride in their school.
I say Husky Football’s
incredible season started
much earlier — and it
started with you.
It started with each and
every loyal season ticket
holder and donor who
stuck by our Huskies when
THE TYEE
DIFFERENCE
Published by the University
of Washington Tyee Club
12-2
fuels student-athletes’ optimum health and wellness while helping us
recruit top-notch coaches and staff. It started with your unshakeable belief
that we could be a championship team, a belief that energized this young
team and gave them confidence.
The fact is, nothing Husky Football accomplished in 2016 would have been
possible without you. Coach Petersen would never have come to the UW
but for the commitment you’ve shown. Our team would never have had
the coaching, the tools and the support they needed to win without you.
So, if you loved this season and you want to see more just like it — and we
will — please pat yourselves on the back and say thanks. And while you’re
at it, you can also take your share of credit for Women’s Golf winning a
national championship last year, for Women’s Basketball’s trip to the Final
Four, for Men’s Soccer in the Sweet 16 and Volleyball in the Elite Eight.
As for me, I will be forever grateful for what you’ve enabled us to do this
HEADLINES, BUT
THE ONLY ONES
SUPPORT THE GAME
CHANGER CAMPAIGN
FOR HUSKY ATHLETICS!
Give your Huskies a competitive edge by donating to
support the education and
development of student-athletes and to fuel the on- and
off-field success of every UW
Athletics team. Learn more
at uwtyeeclub.org.
GRIDIRON WEREN’T
Husky Football closed out their best
season since 2000 with a 12-2 record and
the PAC-12 title, competing for the first
time ever in the NCAA semifinals where
they lost 24-7 to Alabama.
10
Ten Men’s Soccer
players earned
All-Academic honors
while posting a 14-7
record and winning
the PAC-12 conference championship.
They capped their season with a berth
in the NCAA Sweet Sixteen before falling
1-2 to Denver. Women’s Soccer boasted
11 All-Academic selections.
WRITING AND PROJECT
MANAGEMENT
Teresa Moore and
Liz Murtaugh Gillespie,
Moore Ink. PR & Fundraising
Communications
GRAPHIC DESIGN
DavidOwenHastings.com
Go Huskies!
UW TYEE CLUB
T HE T Y E E DI FFERENC E WI N T E R 2017
AND NATIONAL
UW Tyee Club members support
the academic and athletic
experiences of more than 650
University of Washington studentathletes in 22 men’s and women’s
sports. Your gifts account for nearly
25 percent of the funding we need
to recruit the most sought-after
student-athletes, hire the best
coaches, develop championship
teams and build facilities that make
the fan experience second to none.
You make all the difference.
Graves Hall
Box 354070
Seattle WA 98195-4070
2
DOMINATED LOCAL
OUR GUYS ON THE
past year and for what I know you’ll help us accomplish in the future.
Jennifer Cohen
UW Athletic Director
MAY HAVE
VOLUME 2, NUMBER 1
WINTER 2017
seasons weren’t nearly as fun as this one. It started with your support for
renovating Husky Stadium, creating a first-class, integrated facility that
HUSKY FOOTBALL
[email protected]
206.543.2234
uwtyeeclub.org
TOP 8
UW Volleyball earned
their second straight
PAC-12 title en route to their second
consecutive NCAA Elite Eight appearance.
Junior Courtney Schwan was named a
First Team All-American by the American
Volleyball Coaches Association, while
juniors Crissy Jones and Bailey Tanner
were both named to the Second Team.
INNUMERABLE
Individual honors for Husky Football
were too numerous to count. Among
them: Defensive back Budda Baker was
a consensus All-America pick. Receiver
John Ross, offensive lineman Trey Adams
and defensive back Taylor Rapp also
earned All-America honors. Rapp also
was chosen as the PAC-12 freshman
defensive player of the year. Quarterback
Jake Browning was the PAC-12 offensive
player of the year.
WHO THRILLED
US WITH STELLAR
PERFORMANCES
DURING THE
FALL SEASON.
7 of 10
Sixty-nine percent of our
student athletes earned
a 3.0 GPA or better in the
fall quarter. Seven of them earned a perfect 4.0.
21,472
In the past academic year, more than 21,000 Tyee Club members
made financial donations to Husky Athletics, empowering the
success of every team and every student-athlete. Thank you!
UWT Y E EC LUB .O R G
3
YOUNG ALUMNI UNITE
ONE BY ONE, DOZENS OF DIEHARD DAWG FANS FILE ONTO
A CHARTER BUS BOUND FOR
OREGON. THESE FIRED-UP
MEMBERS OF THE YOUNG
TYEE CLUB LIVE AND BREATHE
PURPLE AND GOLD.
In the stands at Autzen Stadium, they
went wild — over and over — as the
Huskies trounced the Ducks 70–21.
“Witnessing a victory like that with
fellow Husky friends, new and old —
it was a day I’ll never forget,” says
Andy Palmer, who joined the club
after graduation in 2012 and now
supports it as a volunteer leader.
In addition to connecting with
new alumni, the Young Tyee Club
is a growing force of philanthropy
for Husky Athletics, supporting a
scholarship fund that helps the
University provide a world-class
education to student-athletes.
The club is open to any UW fan
between the ages of 22 and 30
who gives $50 or more per year
to Husky Athletics.
“I feel really good about
giving back to UW,” Andy
says. “It’s meaningful,
and it’s a ton of fun!”
To learn more and join,
go to uwtyeeclub.org,
click on Tyee Experience
then Young Tyee Club, or
contact Assistant Director of
Advancement Bobby Weigand
at [email protected].
4
T HE T Y E E DI FFERENC E WI N T E R 2017
‘WE REALLY HAVE THE
BEST OF THE BEST HERE’
Even as a high school sophomore, Ali Aguilar
could tell that no other college softball program
on her short list was better equipped than
the University of Washington’s to challenge
her to become the best player — and the best
student — she could possibly be.
With equal parts hope and gratitude, the
standout shortstop turned down other offers
to become a Husky, accepting the George and
Norma Sedlock Endowed Softball Scholarship.
Every day since then, she’s worked hard to
reach the high expectations that she, her
coaches and her professors set for her.
“We really have the best of the best here,”
says Ali, a double major in sociology and
communications. “We’re learning from
amazing professors. The coaching is
phenomenal. We get such great support
from the Athletic Department.”
Now in her fourth and
final season as a Husky,
Ali ranks as one of the
nation’s leading power
hitters. She led the PAC-12
in runs scored last year,
led the conference in RBIs
and base hits, ranked third
in the nation for home
runs per game and was
fourth for total home runs.
A regular on the Dean’s
List, Ali studies as hard
as she trains and plays.
She walks into every class,
every exam, every practice,
every game confident that
she’s as well-prepared as
she can be.
All that preparation paid
off last summer, when she
seized one opportunity
after another to travel and
play with the best players
across the country, first
on the USA Women’s Elite
Team and then on the
USA National Team. She
drove in the game-winning
run to push the USA into the
World Softball Championship
in Surrey, B.C., and then scored
the first run of the team’s
7–3 gold medal victory.
Ali Aguilar
Together with her UW teammates,
this All-American has her sights
set as firmly as ever on the
Women’s College World Series.
She’s pondering her options
for the future. Will she coach?
Will she open a training facility
and teach softball lessons?
Will she go pro?
Because of you and your
support for Husky Athletics,
she’s poised for success, no
matter what path she chooses.
THE BEST AND BRIGHTEST STUDENT-ATHLETES
CHOOSE UW — BECAUSE OF YOU
Every year, gifted athletes like Ali Aguilar come
to the University of Washington not just because
they’re eager to compete at the highest level.
They also want a world-class education. They
get the best of both worlds because of you and
your support of Husky Athletics. When you give
to The Game Changer Campaign for Husky Athletics —
especially when you support or establish a scholarship
endowment — you advance our goal of increasing our
scholarship funding so we can continue to recruit and
support the best and the brightest student-athletes.
UWT Y E EC LUB .O R G
5
BOUNDLESS
THANK YOU, TYEE CLUB MEMBERS, FOR ALL YOUR SUPPORT IN THE HUSKIES’ SPECTACULAR 2016 SEASON
TOGETHER, OUR FUTURE IS BOUNDLESS
A LIFETIME OF MEMORIES,
A LEGACY OF GIVING
TWO ALUMNI EARN RECOGNITION FOR PAYING FORWARD
THE GIFT OF BECOMING LEGENDARY HUSKIES
DAVE AND RUTH COHN ALUMNI MERIT AWARD
DAVE AND RUTH COHN
ALUMNI MERIT AWARD
FRANK ORRICO
AWARD
2016 Eric Cohen
2016 Jim Houston
2015 Patricia “Trish”
Bostrom
2015 Jim Rose
Eric’s parents met on a blind date at a Husky basketball
game more than 60 years ago. They raised their family in
the neighborhood abutting the UW and Lake Washington,
where a young Eric would watch Husky rowers with his
dad. His wife Heidi’s grandmother rowed on the UW crew
team in 1918. Their daughter, Monica, attends the UW.
The family’s sports roots run deeply purple.
Living in the crew house, winning conference
championships and making lifelong friends had such
an impact on Eric that he joined an alumni group,
The Washington Rowing Stewards, and wrote a history
of the program in 2003. He consulted on the PBS
documentary, The Boys of ’36, and the famed book,
The Boys in the Boat.
It’s been more than 30 years
since his teammates tossed
coxswain Eric Cohen into Lake
Washington to celebrate yet
another championship. But
there’s barely a moment of the
Jim Houston
program’s century-long history
that the UW Rowing historian can’t recite.
He and teammate Al Forney founded Husky Crew
Gear to raise money for the program, and along with
teammate Al Erickson, they ultimately established the
Class of ’82 Scholarship Endowment for Rowing. Eric and
Heidi are longtime personal donors as well. Eric credits
his teammates — and his wife — for enabling him to
devote so much of his time and energy to supporting
the program he loves.
Jen Cohen with Jim Houston
Eric Cohen
JIM HOUSTON
FRANK ORRICO AWARD RECIPIENT
One of Husky Football’s most famous games came
close to ending in a scoreless tie. With 6:20 to go
in the fourth quarter of a 1955 home game against
10th-ranked USC, quarterback Steve Roake dropped
back to pass from his own 20-yard line. He connected
with Jim, who took off running.
“I ran about five yards before a USC halfback got a hold
of one leg,” recalls Jim, who earned the Tyee Club’s
2016 Orrico Award for his outstanding commitment
and volunteerism. “As I was about to fall on the 45-yard
line, I lateraled the ball to our other tight end, Corky
Lewis. He rumbled into the end zone 55 yards away for
the winning touchdown. It stood for a long time as the
longest scoring pass play in Washington history.”
Jim was widowed from his UW college sweetheart, Jackie
Lee, after nearly 55 years of marriage and now lives in the
8
A HISTORY OF DEDICATION
“I had a strong passion for athletics and wanted to play
football, but I was five-foot-four in high school and
weighed 85 pounds,” says Eric, honored with the 2016
Cohn Award for outstanding service and support to UW
Athletics by a former letter-winner. “I wanted to compete,
and rowing was it.”
It’s been more than 60 years
since “the pass.” But rarely a
month goes by when former
Husky end Jim Houston isn’t
regaled by fans who still
remember.
Both Jim and Eric
have cemented their
place in Husky history
through their athletic
achievements and
by giving back to the
University that gave
them so much.
ERIC COHEN
T HE T Y E E DI FFERENC E WI N T E R 2017
2013 Jim Lambright
2013 Dave Rost
2012 Mike Rohrbach
2012 Kristie Forrest
2011 Bob Houbregs
2011 Neal Dempsey
2010 John Wilcox
2010 Nick Keller
2009 Denise Ashbaugh
2009 Col. Don
Wiethuechter
2008 Steve Hawes
2007 Andre Riley
2006 Lorenzo Romar
2005 Tom Turnure
2004 Bruce Richards
2003 Greg Lewis
2002 Bill Douglas
2001 Warren Moon
2000 John Buller
1999 Bruce Kramer
1997 Bob Flowers
1996 Rick Redman
1995 Norm Dicks
1994 Charles Mitchell
1993 Dick Sprague
“The UW took me in, just a kid from a little
town, someone who could never have
gone to college without that scholarship,”
says Jim. “They helped me get a degree in
engineering which eventually led me to
become quite successful. I met my wife
there. I felt that I owed them big time.”
“Playing football for Washington opened doors for me.
It still does,” Jim concludes. “It feels good to give back.”
2014 John & Kathy
Connors
1998 John Meyers
Palm Springs area. He still runs into Washington alumni
across the nation who recognize him and remember that
awesome play — just as the self-made millionaire from
Prosser, Washington, always remembers the University
that made it all possible.
Jim has been a generous donor to Husky Athletics
and the University for many years. The Jim Houston
Board Room in renovated Husky Stadium attests to his
generosity, as does all of the times he served as host
for Dawg Days in the Desert.
2014 Blake Nordstrom
2008 Anne Gittinger
2007 LaGayle Sosnowy
2006 Maxine Barnard
2005 Jack Rhodes
2004 Gertrude Peoples
2003 Dave Torrell
2002 Bob McMillen
2001 Tom Porter
2000 Tom Wolthausen
1999 Mike Malone
1998 Don Barnard
1997 Ron Crockett
1996 Dave Cohn
1995 Wayne Gittinger
1994 Bruce Nordstrom
1992 Frank Orrico
1991 John Nordstrom
1990 Rich Worthington
1989 Torchy Torrance
1988 Jim McCurdy
Eric Cohen
“Rowing taught me hard work for a greater purpose,
for a sum that’s bigger than the parts. It was a
wonderful time of growth and learning. It gave me
all my friends. And there’s not a single one of us
who wouldn’t go back in a heartbeat to do it again,”
Eric says. “Giving back is almost a requirement
after all this program gave me.”
YOU CAN MAKE A LEGENDARY IMPACT on your
Huskies by being part of The Game Changer Campaign
for Husky Athletics. No matter how big or small, your
gift will develop young men and women who will go
on to make a lifetime of difference for our University,
our community and our world.
UWT Y E EC LUB .O R G
9
THANK YOU, SCHOLARSHIP DONORS!
YOUR GIFTS BUILD STUDENTATHLETES FOR LIFE
Volleyball player Destiny Julye and
football player Jeff Lindquist came to
Washington for the chance to play the
sports they loved and something even
more meaningful — the opportunity
to become a part of a community
that cares deeply about its studentathletes.
Their gratitude was showcased at the
Tyee Club’s annual Donor Appreciation
Scholarship Dinner.
His “built for life” philosophy
encourages his young football
players to rely on what makes them
great at their sport — accountability,
hard work, toughness, integrity,
loyalty — to grow into great men,
husbands and fathers.
FATHERDAUGHTER
BOND BUILDS
HUSKY LEGACY
“We can be a championship, best-inthe-country football program with all
the wonderful support we have here,”
Coach Petersen said. “We’re going to
play good football, but we also want
to play well at life.”
When unranked Washington beat No.
8 Stanford in a rare Thursday evening
football game on Sept. 27, 2012, Kerry
Sawyer knew her father was cheering
louder than any other fan — even
though he had passed away on the
exact same date
10 years before.
“My brother, sister and I cried tears of
joy in the stands. We celebrated my
dad’s life, the team and this unlikely
victory — just like my father would
have wanted,” recalls Kerry, who
began attending Husky games with
her dad when she was small enough
to fit under a ticket turnstile.
Destiny Julye
are giving each and every one of us
the chance to have a great Plan A.”
Winning — on the field and in life —
was a theme shared by Athletic
Director Jennifer Cohen and Football
Head Coach Chris Petersen.
“You are
supporting the
development
of the young
men and
women in this
room and their
Jen Cohen
becoming the
best versions of themselves — not
just for themselves but so they can
go out into our community and our
society and contribute back,” Jennifer
told donors.
Jeff Lindquist
“When the coaches sat down with me
and my dad to talk about my character
and what they felt I could bring to
the team beyond my athletic ability,
that’s what sealed the deal,” Destiny, a
sophomore, told the crowd. “I decided
to come to Washington for the
community it represented — the other
girls on the team, the coaches and
staff, the culture and the values that
are exemplified in the phrase ‘who we
are is why we win.’”
For Jeff, who was recruited as a
quarterback but didn’t let a shift
to tight end quell his loyalty to the
Huskies, the UW “offered me the best
combination of athletics, academics
and community.”
“As Coach Pete likes to say, life is
Plan A. Football is Plan B,” said the
2016 Foster School of Business
graduate, who earned a final GPA of
3.5. “By supporting scholarships, you
10
Coach Pete
praised the
crowd as “one of
the big reasons
I came here.”
When Glenn founded Toyota of
Puyallup, his purple and gold passion
spurred him to become one of the
original Dawg Dealers — a program
that donates cars to Husky coaches
and staff. He became friends with
many of the coaches, who came to
the Sawyer home for dinnertime
discussions with the whole family.
Siblings Kerry, Ryan and Lisa
LEFT TO RIGHT: Destiny Julye, Ben Remak and John Mills
Chris Petersen
“The thing that
surprised me
most about coming to Washington
was that the support was what I
hoped it would be — at the games,
in academics, the Tyee Club, the
scholarship donors,” explained
Coach Pete. “We have so many
people who want to change lives.”
T HE T Y E E DI FFERENC E WI N T E R 2017
LEFT TO RIGHT: Carlos Johnson, David Crisp,
Matisse Thybulle, Markelle Fultz and Malik Dime
LEFT TO RIGHT: Psalm Wooching and Kathy Trimble
Kerry Sawyer speaks to endowment
donors at the Scholarship Dinner
It was one of countless Husky
memories tied to Glenn Sawyer, who
created a legacy of support that
proudly lives on in Kerry and her
siblings, Lisa and Ryan (all UW grads).
“Opening day of Husky Football was
like Christmas day for my dad and
he shared that passion with us,”
says Kerry. “I love everything about
the game today — the energy,
the enthusiasm of the fans and
student-athletes, the competition.
It brings back all the positive
memories of my father.”
Kerry took over the company when
her father passed away. Today, she
continues his legacy with the Dawg
Dealers and has developed her own
close relationships with UW Athletics
staff. She’s also been inspired to
expand her support by establishing
a scholarship endowment and by
serving on the Tyee Board of Advisors.
“I wanted to leave my own
legacy while also honoring my
father and making a bigger
impact on these young men’s
lives,” she explains. “My core
values, the values of my
business and the values that
Coach Pete instills with his
‘built for life’ philosophy are
closely aligned. There’s never
been a more promising time
for us all to increase our level
of support for our Huskies.”
WHEN YOU ESTABLISH A
FULL OR PARTIAL ENDOWMENT
— a perpetually ongoing source of financial support — you
make a game-changing difference for your Huskies. Contact us
at 206.543.2234 or [email protected] to learn more.
UWT Y E EC LUB .O R G
11
THE
TYEE
DIFFERENCE
UNIVERSITY OF
WASHINGTON
Box 354070
Seattle WA 98195-4070
[email protected]
206.543.2234
uwtyeeclub.org
YOUR SUPPORT. THEIR FUTURE. OUR HUSKIES.
GAME CHANGERS 2016
WINTER 2017
WHAT A SEASON!
PAGES 3, 6 – 7
Thank you to all the dedicated donors who committed $50,000 or more in 2016
to The Game Changer Campaign for Husky Athletics!
A LIFETIME OF MEMORIES,
A LEGACY OF GIVING
Maryanne & Monti Ackerman
Tom & Mary Herche
David & Carol Robinson
The Barnard Family
Craig & Ramona Higashi
Katie & Matthew Rossmeissl
YOUR GIFTS BUILD STUDENT
ATHLETES FOR LIFE
John Baughn
Fred W. Hines Jr.
Randy & Karen Rushforth
Marjorie Beardsley
Greg & Joelle Hoff
Kerry Sawyer
Thomas Benton
Kevin & Krista Hughes
Paul & Susan Skoglund
Robert & Jeri Berg
Richard & Janet Hunter
Skip & Carrie Slavin
Ed & Pam Bridge
Nick & Michele Keller
Janet Straus & Kathleen Raney
Dwayne & Terese Clark
John Kincaid
E.C. Suhrbier Family
Jen & Bill Cohen
M. Thomas & Gwenann Kroon
Scott & Catherine Swanson
Connell Oil Incorporated
Christopher & Jonell Lee
Garth & Shelley Thomas
Douglas & Patricia Cook
Brian & Nancy Leitgeb
Robert & Debra Thompson
Ron & Wanda Crockett
Mark & Stacie Ludden
Bob & Kathy Trimble
Michael & Melanie Crowson
AJ Maestas & Lacey Bundy
Jim & Patty Voelker
Neal & Jan Dempsey III
Tim & Rachel Mitrovich
John & Diane Wallace
Craig & Marilee Eerkes
Neubauer Capital, LLC
Alex & Erika Washburn
Paul & Linda Ellingson
Bruce & Jeannie Nordstrom
Bob & Peggy Wilkerson
Lorne & Tyera Enquist
Blake & Molly Nordstrom
William & Allison Williams III
Kristie & Ben Forrest
Janice & Rodney Olson
Steven & Dixie Wilson
Rick Freedman
John & Ingrid Osterhaug
Anthony Zedick & Marcia Bloemendaal
Gary & Della Furukawa
Todd & Julie Patrick
Anonymous
Georgetown Brewing Company
Joseph & Erika Pendergast
Anne Gittinger
Douglas Pettis Jr.
Gary & Marcia Grimstad
William & Dorothy Philip
Wayne & Carol Gullstad
Dean & Gwenn Polik
Daniel & Pamela Hay
Nancy & Ben Remak
*Gifts as of December 31, 2016
PAGES 8 – 9
PAGES 10 – 11